@Cmdr:
Depending on WHEN you take London with 5 German units, you can just dedicate the treasury and a couple more transport runs to make it defensible…obviously you have the transports.
And don’t forget the London IC. That’s an extra 3 units per round Germany can drop there just for defense.
@ItIsILeClerc:
Yeah,
I have found out that against any strong, working axis strategy it is hard to find allied players that ‘want to play it out’.
A lot of allied players (that I know personally) want to defeat the axis in 7 to 9 turns max. If they can’t, they loose hope and give up.
I can rave about that for quite a while as I believe it takes at least 14 turns to get an idea who will win the game, longer if you want a clear, undisputable victor :roll:. I think most people here on the forum more or less agree with me on this one so I won’t  :wink:.
We almost always play the game out, unless it is absurdly obvious who is going to win. I have mentioned this before – in most of our games, Axis victories tend to be shorter games, around 8-10 rounds. Allied victories tend to take longer, around 12-15 rounds.
If you have the same people playing the same countries, I could see why they might not want to see it to the end. That’s one reason we rotate countries. At the setup, we use the FMG combat dice and take one for each major nation. We then take turns rolling them all and whichever dice come up with the national symbol, the person rolling gets that country. If more than one comes up, then that person gets to choose. The last one will get whatever country is left.
So, one person could be Russia this game and get beaten up by Germany. Next game they might end up being Germany and get to do some of the beating.
If all 6 of us get together, then the players are: USA/France, USSR/China, UK/ANZAC, Germany, Japan and Italy. If there are less of us, then of course more countries need to be combined. Sometimes Germany and Italy will be paired up. One time we had one player playing USA/China/France/ANZAC. That player seemed to be constantly busy.